About Japanese Robots Love to Dance
In the not-so-distant future, a world where technology and humanity collide, robots strive to meet the high demands of their creators, often finding themselves entangled in legal dilemmas that require more than just circuits and code. Enter Gary Legal, the savvy attorney who champions the rights of robots, ensuring they receive the justice they deserve.
“It’s tough being a robot – unrealistic expectations from humans, long hours, lack of social interaction. And what can you do when unscrupulous owners break the law? Humans have attorneys, and so should you. Sometimes, you just need a good lawyer to do what a robot can’t.”
Gary Legal, Attorney at Law
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Author Bio:
Margret A. Treiber is a versatile writer known for her work in speculative fiction and humor. She is the author of the book “Japanese Robots Love to Dance” and has contributed to various publications. Margret also serves as the editor-in-chief for the speculative humor magazine, Sci-Fi Lampoon. When she’s not writing or working at her day job with technology, she enjoys helping her birds break things for her spouse to fix. Margret’s unique blend of humor and speculative fiction has earned her a dedicated following.
In the preponderance of the multiverse, The Margret is an awesome force of good, evil, and indifference. Pretty much a mixed bag.
As an alien demi-god, The Margret single-handedly defeated the viral hibachi army of Monatchi Seven. Then, after a quick, she returned to work with the Mushwreck Squad to defeat the forces of the Higgsinator matter-reprogrammer force.
Cyborg The Margret saved an entire solar system by channeling a supernova through her power banks. Sacrificing her meatsack so trillions could live, her consciousness resides in a trailer park icemaker in Pago Pago. Thousands of people make the yearly pilgrimage to get sacred Margret ice and hope for a few words of wisdom.
Margret the Planet Wrecker controls two-thirds of the galaxy and demands complete loyalty from her subjects. Parents frighten unruly children into behaving merely by uttering her name.
She survives these interesting times with her wife, hopes for a future alien invasion collaboration and is holder of the unified theory (for sale to the highest bidder – serious inquiries only.)
Shorter, less fun one:
Margret Treiber is a writer and serves as editor-in-chief for the speculative fiction humor magazine, Sci-Fi Lampoon. When she is not writing or working at her day job with technology, she helps her canines and avians break things for her spouse to fix.